Obama would deal on immigration reform

Tuesday

Nov 26, 2013 at 12:01 AMNov 26, 2013 at 11:51 AM

SAN FRANCISCO - President Barack Obama invoked the Thanksgiving spirit yesterday in search of an immigration deal with Congress, making a pitch for a legislative priority amid a West Coast fundraising swing.

SAN FRANCISCO — President Barack Obama invoked the Thanksgiving spirit yesterday in search of an immigration deal with Congress, making a pitch for a legislative priority amid a West Coast fundraising swing.

The Democratic-controlled Senate has passed a comprehensive bill that includes border security and a path to citizenship for millions of immigrants illegally in the United States. Obama prefers that approach but says he’s willing to go along with House Republicans who want to break immigration reform into pieces.

“It’s Thanksgiving. We can carve that bill into multiple pieces,” Obama said to laughter at the Betty Ann Ong Chinese Recreation Center in the Chinatown neighborhood.

Obama said a quarter of the foreign-born population in the United States in 2011 came from Asian countries, and more than a million of the 11 million immigrants in the U.S. illegally are from Asia.

Later, Obama was interrupted by a heckler standing on the stage behind him who shouted at the president to stop deportations that split up families. Obama says he needs Congress to change the law to have that power. When security tried to remove the demonstrator from the event, Obama said he could stay and that they share the same goal.

“It won’t be as easy as just shouting. It requires us lobbying,” Obama said.

Facing opposition from many rank-and-file Republicans, House GOP leaders don’t plan to hold any votes on immigration during what remains of this year.

At the San Francisco Jazz Center hours later, Obama reflected in personal terms about his own family’s struggles as he continued a fundraising swing he started the night before in Seattle.

He said he starts each morning thinking about how he found himself in public service in the first place: the difficulties for his grandmother, who as a woman hit a glass ceiling in her career; his mother, who relied on scholarships as a single mom; and his wife’s father, a blue-collar worker who never went to college. Obama said he thinks about his family’s trajectory and what the U.S. has done for his family.

“I travel around the country and I see that story repeated over and over again,” Obama said, adding that he feels privileged to be president “because in some small measure every single day, I have an opportunity to advance that story.”

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